list.co.uk/festival Octopus | FESTIVAL THEATRE

P H O T O :

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Z U L E K A H E N R Y

ANARCHY IN

THE UK Gareth K Vile talks to Afsaneh Gray, an emerging writer tackling the problems of Britishness through comedy and punk music

T he recent referendum on Britain’s membership of the European Union sadly generated more heat than light: both the campaigns before and the aftermath of the vote for Brexit were marked by inane rhetoric and paranoid bombast. Fortunately, in the midst of this environment, writer Afsaneh Gray remembered that theatre is a valuable place for the exploration of complex ideas.

‘I was inspired to write the play by a number of conversations I was having with friends of mine with mixed-race backgrounds,’ she says ‘We were getting fed up of being asked to represent our communities.’ Being half Jewish and half Iranian, Gray recognised that conversations about racial identity ignore a salient fact. ‘Mixed race is the fastest growing ethnicity in the UK. It struck me that our experience the experience of those who don’t quite i t into a white Britishness but also don’t quite i t into anything else is rarely seen or explored.’ Octopus evolved from these observations. A story of young women who fail to i t lazy categorisations, it follows the decision of Sarah, Sara and Scheherazade to refuse the question of Britishness and form a punk band. And in

their self-dei nition as ‘octopi’ not only mixed race but mixed up about their heritage a new, emergent British identity is suggested. Gray’s attitude towards notions of Britishness and otherness is not merely a simple rejection of racist complaints about immigration. She has observed that the anxiety to include excluded voices has led to absurd situations. ‘One friend, for example had been invited into the rehearsal room of a play set in a country that her parents were from, but felt profoundly uncomfortable in the role of the authentic voice,’ she rel ects. ‘First of all, her religion was different from that of the characters in the play. Second of all, she had never lived in the country of her parents’ origin.’

With music by harpist Serai na Steer, Octopus is far from a dour polemic on the wrongs and rights of racial identity. Like its heroines, it rejoices in an anarchic wit that challenges ill-informed notions. ‘As rhetoric around immigration and terrorism is becoming increasingly rabid, a new kind of anxiety over Britishness and national identity has crept in that makes our position feel less secure than it did when I was growing up,’ Gray continues.

It’s in this mixture of passion and comedy that Octopus aims to hit home. ‘I hope the audience will laugh, [and] see themselves in the play. I think that’s where a lot of laughter comes from,’ she continues. ‘They’re very welcome to cry somebody did at the Greenwich Theatre reading but most of all I hope they leave with a sense of anger and purpose.’

Although political theatre is always common at the Edinburgh Fringe, Octopus is remarkable for taking on a topic that is controversial, and not easily resolved. The characters i nd a solution to the state’s attempt to pin them down to a particular community by effectively creating their own but, as the referendum exposed, the current political climate is encouraging all manner of retrogressive attitudes. Gray’s sense of injustice, and sense of humour, challenges these ideas, lending Octopus the same i erce freedom that its heroines demand through the power of punk.

Octopus, Assembly George Square Theatre, 623 3030, until 28 Aug (not 15), 1.45pm, £10–£11 (£9–£10).

11–18 Aug 2016 THE LIST FESTIVAL 81